When another invading criminal Mexican alien murdered another white woman in California, a Mexican politician said Americans were getting all worked up over a little thing.

Several little things happened in Mexico

I guess that is no big deal, according to that Mexican politician.

Diversity is our strength!

Quote:

The family was traveling in a vehicle when it was kidnapped by armed men wearing masks and dressed in military-like fatigues...

...their decapitated bodies were found days later in northern Mexico...

The bodies were found after a ninth member of the Martinez family escaped Sunday's abduction near Casa Quemada, in the state of Chihuahua, and alerted the authorities...

The bodies of three more men were found on a rural road on Wednesday...

A day earlier, authorities recovered five other bodies that had been dumped in different parts of Casa Quemada.

On July 18, 11 men traveling in three vehicles on a dirt road were killed in a remote area of Durango when they were apparently ambushed by armed civilians.

Five other men were wounded in the attack...

US law enforcement officials suspect that Sinaloa drug cartel leader Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman is hiding in the region following his July 11 escape from prison. [the Us federal government is in business with the Sinaloa drug gang, and that is who all the illegal firearms and explosives went to in the BATF's illegal gun running operation, and that is who helps the CIA sell their Afghan Heroin."]

The city of Ciudad Juarez, which borders Texas and is part of Chihuahua, was once considered the murder capital of Mexico...

hispanic leaders kept telling us the murder of Kate Steinle was "a little thing" and that "we shouldn't determine immigration policy on the bad deeds of one person" (not hesitating to ban Southern Confederate history after the Charleston shooting) ... problem is it's hundreds, thousands, millions.

This booking photo released Tuesday, July 28, 2015, by the Lake County Sheriff’s Department shows Juan Emmanuel Razo, 35, arrested after a shootout with deputies in Painesville Township, Ohio. (Lake County Sheriff's Department via AP)

Authorities say Juan Emmanuel Razo fatally shot Margaret Kostelnik.

Dan Gilmore: Illegal Immigrant With No ID Murders in Ohio â€” The Patriot Post
Illegal Immigrant With No ID Murders in OhioBarack Obama has said again and again that his immigration policies only deport the illegal immigrants who are the worst of the worst. But in prioritizing certain deportations, a Mexican who had no driver’s license, green card or birth certificate allegedly murdered a 60-year-old woman, attempted to rape a 14-year-old girl, and wounded another person. Juan Emmanuel Razo was only taken into custody July 27 after a shootout with Ohio law enforcement. But here’s the kicker: Immigration officials questioned Razo July 7 and decided to let him go; he had committed no crime at that point. This incident did not occur because of some local policy creating a sanctuary city — the policy that led to the murder of Kathryn Steinle in San Francisco. But Razo’s case is still anecdotal evidence that a tough immigration enforcement strategy might have stopped this violence. (No one said Donald Trump didn’t have a point.) Now that Razo’s charged with a string of violent crimes, justice demands a reckoning — and sloughing him off to where he came from is not an option. The municipal judge, Judge Michael Cicconetti, said at the arraignment, “I can’t set a bond high enough. How in the hell do I even know it’s him?” Indeed, how could ICE verify that Razo — if that’s his real name — didn’t commit a violent crime before?

An illegal immigrant suspected of murdering one woman, wounding another and attempting to rape a 14-year-old girl was released earlier this month by Ohio sheriff's deputies after U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents told them not to hold him, law enforcement officials said Tuesday.

Juan Emmanuel Razo, 35, was arrested Monday after a shootout with police following a crime spree police say began with the attempted rape of a girl in a park in Painesville, about 30 miles northeast of Cleveland. He later shot a woman in front of her children and murdered a 60-year-old woman in nearby Concord Township, according to police. While Razo is being held on $10 million bond, authorities are trying to explain why he was allowed to remain in the U.S. illegally after local authorities questioned him just three weeks ago.

"I can't set a bond high enough."

- Painesville Municipal Court Judge Michael Cicconetti
“I have somebody who we don’t know who he is, why he is in this country, why he is here illegally and why he allegedly committed a murder," Painesville Municipal Court Judge Michael Cicconetti thundered at Razo's arraignment, noting the suspect has no green card, birth certificate or driver's license.

"I can't set a bond high enough," he continued. "How in the hell do I even know it's him?"

Cicconetti later told Fox News he did not understand how federal authorities could have ordered Razo released on July 7 when local deputies questioned him and contacted Border Protection officials, given that no one could even verify his identity.

Should 'sanctuary cities' lose their federal funding?
"If you are stopped, at that point, whether it be by law enforcement or you make your first court appearance, at that point we have to have some kind of identifier on him," he said.

Deputies who questioned Razo say Border Protection officials told them Razo is from Mexico and in the U.S. illegally, but said they would not pick him up for deportation. Lake County Sheriff Dan Dunlap said at a news conference that deputies released Razo because he hadn't committed a crime at that point.

This booking photo released Tuesday, July 28, 2015, by the Lake County Sheriff’s Department shows Juan Emmanuel Razo, 35, arrested after a shootout with deputies in Painesville Township, Ohio. (Lake County Sheriff's Department via AP)
A Border Protection spokesman did not return telephone messages seeking comment. A spokesman for U.S. Immigration Customs Enforcement said in an email that ICE was closely monitoring the case. The email identified Razo as Juan Emmanuel Razo-Ramirez.

A detective said during the arraignment that Razo has confessed to the deadly, one-day crime spree in the quiet Lake Erie town. Police began seeking Razo late Monday morning after the girl described him to police and said he had tried to rape her. Hours later, he allegedly shot a 40-year-old woman in the arm as she walked with her two children along a bike path and an hour after that, a man told park rangers he'd found his wife, 60-year-old Margaret Kostelnik, shot to death in their home near the bike path.

The Lake County coroner said Kostelnik, who was an assistant to the mayor in nearby Willoughby, was shot multiple times.

Anderson said he worked with Kostelnik for the 24 years he served as mayor and that her family is deeply entrenched in the 23,000-person community. Her husband has worked as the town’s cemetery sexton for the past 25 years.

“She genuinely cared,” Anderson said.

Willoughby and Concord Township are in Lake County, and Painesville is the county seat.

A public defender entered a not guilty plea for Razo on Tuesday.

Tension between local and federal law enforcement agencies over how to handle illegal immigrants was brought to the forefront after the killing of Kathryn Steinle July 1 on a San Francisco pier. The 32-year-old was allegedly shot by Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez who had been deported five times and had a felony record.

Lopez-Sanchez has said he came to San Francisco because he knew local police would not turn him over for deportation because of the city’s sanctuary policy, which has caused Republicans to blame these policies adopted by liberal enclaves nationwide.

Lopez-Sanchez was freed in March on an old marijuana charge even though Immigration and Customs Enforcement had filed a detainer request with San Francisco law enforcement. The city's sheriff's department was criticized for releasing Lopez-Sanchez and not notifying federal immigration authorities.

Lopez-Sanchez pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and weapons charges in the case. His bail was set at $5 million, which means he will stay in jail until the murder trial, where he faces a possible sentence of life imprisonment.

A Solano County jury has found Henry Albert Smith Jr. guilty on all counts of first-degree murder in the 2011 death of Vallejo Police Officer James Capoot.

Capoot was fatally shot as he chased down Smith in a North Vallejo neighborhood following a bank robbery. Capoot pursued the suspect behind some homes and shots were fired. When Capoot's fellow officers reached him they saw that he had been shot three times. He died from his injuries.

Deliberations in the trial had to restart twice.

Just this week, the judge removed a juror for bias against police after the juror allegedly called a bailiff quote "a thug with a gun."

A Rochester man has pleaded guilty to first degree rape. Shahmell Robinson, 21, raped a 14 year-old while another man, Jordan McCloud, 22, allegedly recorded the assault on his phone. Documents that were revealed earlier stated that the victim was "unconscious and unable to communicate due to severe intoxication."

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - The level of support for efforts to find 21-month-old Lonzie Barton continues to grow as police expand their search to include dozens of square miles on northeast Duval County.

The search for the missing toddler expanded Thursday into areas north of the Trout River and east of Interstate 95 as police tracked the travel of the suspect's orange 1995 Honda Civic between 7 p.m. July 23 and 2 a.m. July 24 -- from the time Ruben Ebron, dropped Lonzie's mother off at work to when he reported the boy missing.…Police say Ebron claimed someone stole his car with Lonzie inside. The car was quickly found less than a mile from where it was reported stole with no sign of Lonzie. Within 24 hours, police said Ebron was inside his apartment doing cocaine at the time and called his story of Lonzie's abduction a lie.http://www.news4jax.com/news/search-for-lonzie-enters-second-week-help-support-remains-strong/34458340

Earlier this month Anniston, Alabama Council member David Reddick stopped by Ford`s Barbershop on Leatherwood Road on the western outskirt of Anniston and demanded owner Milton Ford take down the Confederate Battle flag outside his shop.Of course, owner Ford refused. That’s when Reddick started threatening the owner with what he would do to him for flying the Confederate flag at his own business and on his own property.

Santa Cruz County District Attorney Jeffrey Rosell announced that Adrian Jerry Gonzalez, 15, will be tried as an adult in the murder of 8-year-old Madyson "Maddy" Middleton. The murder charges includes special circumstances of sexual assault, kidnapping and lying in wait.

At a news conference outside the Santa Cruz County Courthouse on Wednesday morning, Rosell said that Gonzalez faces life in prison. "We have charged this individual as an adult with the crimes for which he is responsible. We're going to bring him to justice and there is no plea deal on the table for anything," said Rosell.

Court documents obtained by ABC7 News frame a chilling crime. They say Maddy was tied up or bound during the attack.

"You look at the nature of the crimes, you look at how the crimes were committed, you look at the age of the offender and you look at criminal record if any, those are typically the factors that are used to balance," Rosell said.

Edward Sample was convicted Friday of attempted second-degree murder in the shooting of a Memphis police officer.
The officer, Josh Shearer, testified he had chased the suspect after a report of a carjacking in April 2012. He gave several verbal commands for Sample to stop running, show his hands and get on the ground before he took the suspect down to the ground and attempted to get control of his hands, he said.
The suspect rolled over and shot him in the chest, Shearer said. The officer’s vest helped stop the impact, but the bullet penetrated the vest and made contact with his skin.
Shearer said they fought, and Shearer struck Sample in the head several times with his gun, shot him in the throat or neck area and put handcuffs on him, he said.
Sample’s attorney, Terrell Tooten, argued that Sample did not know why he was being chased and that he was beaten.
The jury also convicted Sample of aggravated assault, evading arrest and one count of employing a firearm during a felony.

Police arrested a man who allegedly tried to pull a handgun on an officer, then fought with the officer over the gun.
Police said the officer pulled over 20-year-old Owerrie Davon Bacon Jr. of on July 23 on Denny Road for an expired registration.
As the officer issued a citation, Bacon allegedly tried to pull a .22-caliber revolver from his waistband, according to officials.
The suspect and the officer allegedly struggled over the handgun and Bacon allegedly punched the officer in the face and ran. Police arrested the suspect Friday at 715 Greenhaven Drive.
Bacon faces various charges including assault on a government officer with a deadly weapon, carrying a concealed pistol or gun, alter or remove gun serial number and other charges.